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Test your basic knowledge |
Skeletal System
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
health-sciences
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The visceral bone in the snout of swine that strengthens it for the rooting behavior of pigs.
Condyle
Os Rostri
Trochoid Joint
Scapula
2. The lay term for the most proximal joint of the equine digit - which is the joint between the large metacarpal or metatarsal and the proximal phalanx. The proximal sesamoid bones are located on the caudal surface of this joint.
Tarsal Bones
Phalanx
Fetlock Joint
Brachium
3. Bones formed in the soft organs (viscera); examples include the os penis - the os cordis - and the os rostri.
Mandible
Pterygoid Bones
Visceral Skeleton
Brachycephalic
4. One of the irregular bones of the spinal column.
Ungual Process
Extension
Growth Plate
Vertebra
5. Paired sesamoid bones in the legs of horses; located in the large digital flexor tendons behind the fetlock joints.
Mandible
Proximal Sesamoid Bones
Floating Rib
Fibrous Joint
6. The outer layer of a bone that is composed of compact bone.
Navicular Bone
Bone Cortex
Joint Capsule
Abduction
7. The cranial portion of the dorsal body cavity formed from several skull bones; it houses and protects the brain.
Ribs
Cranium
Vertebra
Osteoclasts
8. An immovable joint; also known as a synarthrosis. The bones are firmly united by fibrous tissue; includes the sutures between the skull bones.
Lumbar Vertebrae
Synarthrosis
Fibrous Joint
Foramen
9. A toe that does not reach the ground - such as the first digit of dogs and cats and the rudimentary medial and lateral toes of cattle.
Dewclaw
Costal Cartilage
Arthrodial Joint
Manubrium
10. The paranasal sinus in the sphenoid bone; only present in horses.
Tarsal Bones
Arthrodial Joint
Skull
Sphenoid Sinus
11. The bony canal in the temporal bone that leads into the middle and inner ear cavities of the bone; in the living animal - it contains the external ear canal.
Calcaneal Tuberosity
Dens
External Acoustic Meatus
Abduction
12. The most proximal bony structure of the pelvic limb; also known as the os coxae. Attaches to the sacrum dorsally at the sacroiliac joints and forms the hip joints with the heads of the femurs.
Sesamoid Bones
Cornual Process
Os Penis
Pelvis
13. A space within a skull bone that is an outpouching of a nasal cavity; depending on the species - these are found within the frontal bones - maxillary bones - sphenoid bones - and ethmoid bones.
Mandible
Paranasal Sinus
Lacrimal Bones
Ataxia
14. A bone of a digit (finger or toe). Pl. - phalanges.
Paranasal Sinus
Antebrachium
Phalanx
Bone Marrow
15. The group of vertebrae located dorsal to the abdominal region.
Hinge Joint
Lumbar Vertebrae
Parietal Bones
Calcaneal Tuberosity
16. The large metacarpal and metatarsal bones (III) of the horse.
Vomer Bone
Hematopoiesis
Hock
Cannon Bone
17. The process on the distal end of the distal phalanx of dogs and cats that is surrounded by the claw in the living animal.
Ungual Process
Osteocytes
Femur
Pelvis
18. The last - most caudal sternebra; the _____ process.
Pelvic Limb
Arthrodial Joint
Metacarpal Bones
Xiphoid
19. The vertical portion of the mandible located at its caudal end; site where jaw muscles attach to the mandible.
Ramus
Ribs
Adduction
Carpus
20. The bones of the neck portion of the spinal column.
Cranium
Turbinates
Growth Plate
Cervical Vertebrae
21. A thin bone located beside the tibia in the lower leg region of the pelvic limb. It is a complete bone in the dog and cat - but only the proximal and distal ends are present in horses and cattle. It doesn't support any appreciable weight - but acts a
Navicular Bone
Foramen
Articular Cartilage
Fibula
22. A skull bone; an internal bone of the cranium. This single bone is located just rostral to the sphenoid bone and contains the cribriform plate.
Ethmoid Bone
Circumduction
Carpus
Fabellae
23. The upper arm; the area of the thoracic limb between the elbow and the shoulder.
Brachium
Amphiarthroses
Xiphoid
Asternal Ribs
24. Blood cell production; usually occurs in red bone marrow.
Synarthrosis
Cribriform Plate
Ligament
Hematopoiesis
25. A lateral - projecting process of a vertebra.
Asternal Ribs
Splint Bones
Transverse Processes
Incus
26. Skull bones that are part of the external bones of the face; these two bones are the most rostral skull bones and contain the upper incisors in all domestic animals except ruminants.
Joint Space
Diarthrosis
Occipital Bone
Incisive Bones
27. One of two small sesamoid bones located in the proximal gastrocnemius muscle tendon just above and behind the femoral condyles of dogs and cats.
Fabellae
Pelvic Symphysis
Facet
Sesamoid Bones
28. The cartilaginous joint (amphiarthrosis) that unites the two sides of the mandible at the rostral end in dogs - cats - and cattle.
Os Rostri
Shaft
Humerus
Mandibular Symphysis
29. The long - flexible - caudal portion of the dorsal body cavity formed by the adjacent arches of the vertebrae of the spine; it houses and protects the spinal cord.
Visceral Skeleton
Spinal Canal
Parietal Bones
Ossicles
30. A skull bone; one of the external bones of the face. It is the lower jaw - the only movable skull bone - and contains all of the lower teeth.
Bones of the face
Spheroidal Joint
Mandible
Synovial Fluid
31. Skull bones that are part of the internal bones of the face; also known as the nasal conchae. Four thin - scroll - like bones that fill most of the space in the nasal cavity.
Rotation
Digit
Turbinates
Fibrous Joint
32. A hinge joint in which one articular surface swivels around another; the only movements possible are flexion and extension.
Long Bone
Ginglymus Joint
Calcitonin
Shaft
33. The immovable fibrous joints that unite most of the skull bones; also known as synarthroses.
Incisive Bones
Sutures
Ligament
Sacrum
34. The 'horn core' of horned animals; a process of the frontal bone. The hollow cavity within this process is continuous with the frontal sinus (the paranasal sinus of the frontal bone).
Cornual Process
Bone Cortex
Articular Cartilage
Palatine Bones
35. A rib whose costal cartilage joins the costal cartilage of the rib ahead of it instead of directly joining the sternum.
Rotation
Palatine Bones
Head
Asternal Ribs
36. Skull bones that are part of the internal bones of the face; support part of the lateral walls of the pharynx.
Fibula
Pterygoid Bones
Articular Surface
Bone Cortex
37. Skull bones that are the bones of the ear; three pair of bones in the middle ear that transmit sound wave vibrations from the tympanic membrane to the inner ear.
Tibia
Ossicles
Spinous Process
Ball - and - Socket Joint
38. A slightly movable cartilaginous joint - such as the pubic symphysis.
Frontal Bones
Vertebra
Osteoblasts
Amphiarthroses
39. The joint movement that decreases the angle between two bones.
Tarsus
Floating Rib
Flexion
Ethmoid Sinus
40. The socket portion of the ball - and - socket hip joint; it is formed at the junction of the ilium - ischium - and pubic bones of the pelvis.
Ramus
Navicular Bone
Articular Surface
Acetabulum
41. Large process of the fibular tarsal bone that projects upward and backward; commonly referred to as the point of the hock. Site of attachment of the gastrocnemius (calf) muscle and equivalent to the human heel.
Irregular Bones
Articular Surface
Calcaneal Tuberosity
Carpus
42. The smooth joint surface of a bone that contacts another bone in a synovial joint.
Callus
Articular Surface
Floating Rib
Flat Bone
43. The central canal that runs the length of a haversian system; contains blood vessels - lymph vessels - and nerves that supply and nourish the osteocytes.
Red Bone Marrow
Haversian Canal
Ribs
Axial Skeleton
44. The vertebrae of the pelvic region; fuse to form a solid structure which forms a joint with the ilium called the sacroiliac joint.
Mandible
Sacral Vertebrae
Skull
Axis
45. The joint movement whereby an extremity is moved away from the median plane.
Anconeal Process
Sphenoid Bone
Abduction
Thoracic Limb
46. Incoordination; animals with this make jerky - spastic movements.
Carpus
Atlas
Ataxia
Pivot Joint
47. The type of bone formation whereby bone grows into and replaces a cartilage model; this is the method by which most bones form in a developing fetus - starting with cartilage 'prototypes' that are gradually replaced by bone. It is also the means by w
Nasal Septum
Flat Bone
Endochondral Bone Formation
Maxillary Bones
48. The joint composed of the tarsal bones; referred to as the hock in most animals and the ankle in humans.
Tarsus
Cannon Bone
Volkmann's Canals
Thoracic Limb
49. One of two concave - half moon - shaped - cartilaginous structures on the proximal surface of the tibia that help support the condyles of the femur.
Meniscus
Malleus
Axis
Trochoid Joint
50. The first - most cranial sternebra.
Floating Rib
Manubrium
Extension
Articular Process